Group III: Pleadings and Motions · Last amended January 1, 2022 · Last verified July 14, 2026
(1) No plaintiff shall have leave to amend a pleading, unless in matters of form, after a default until the defendant has been provided with notice and an opportunity to be heard, to show cause why the amendment should not be allowed.
(2) Amendments in matters of form will be allowed or ordered, as of course, on motion; but, if the defect or want of form be shown by the adverse party, the order to amend will be made on such terms as justice may require.
(3) Amendments in matters of substance may be made on such terms as justice may require.
(4) Amendments may be made to the Complaint or Answer upon the order of the court, at any time and on such terms as may be imposed.
(b) Motions to Consolidate. Whenever a Motion is filed in any county requesting the transfer of an action there pending to another county for trial with an action there pending, arising out of the same transaction or event or involving common issues of law, and/or fact, the court may, after notice to all parties in all such pending actions and hearing, make such order for consolidation in any one of such counties in which such actions are pending, as justice and convenience require.
(1) Continuances may be granted upon such terms as the court shall order.
(2) All motions for continuance or postponement shall be signed and dated by the attorney, non- attorney representative, or self-represented party filing such motion. Any other party wishing to join in any such motion shall also do so in writing. Each such motion shall contain a certification by the attorney, non-attorney representative, or self-represented party filing such motion that the party so filing the motion has been notified of the reasons for the continuance or postponement, has assented thereto either orally or in writing, and has been forwarded a copy of the motion.
(3) Where a trial has been scheduled in one case prior to the scheduling of another matter in another court, or elsewhere, where an attorney, non-attorney representative or self-represented party has a conflict in date and time, the case first scheduled shall not be subject to a continuance because of the subsequently scheduled matter which is in conflict as to time and date except as follows:
(a) A subsequently scheduled case involving trial by jury in a Superior, or Federal District Court, or argument before the Supreme Court.
(b) Unusual circumstances causing the respective courts to agree that an order of precedence other than the above shall take place.
(d) Motions to Dismiss. Upon request of a party, hearings on motions to dismiss shall be scheduled as soon as practicable, but no later than 30 days prior to the date set for trial on the merits, unless the court shall otherwise order in the exercise of discretion. All parties shall be prepared, at any such hearing, to present all necessary arguments.
(e) Motions to Reconsider. A party intending to file a Motion for Reconsideration or to request other post- decision relief shall do so within 10 days of the date on the written Notice of the order or decision, which shall be mailed or electronically delivered by the clerk on the date of the Notice. The Motion shall state, with particular clarity, points of law or fact that the court has overlooked or misapprehended and shall contain such argument in support of the Motion as the movant desires to present; but the motion shall not exceed 10 pages. To preserve issues for an appeal to the Supreme Court, an appellant must have given the court the opportunity to consider such issues; thus, to the extent that the court, in its decision, addresses matters not previously raised in the case, a party must identify any alleged errors concerning those matters in a motion under this rule to preserve such issues for appeal. A hearing on the motion shall not be permitted except by order of the court.
(1) No Answer or Objection to a Motion for Reconsideration or other post-decision relief shall be required unless ordered by the court.
(2) If a Motion for Reconsideration or other post-decision relief is granted, the court may revise its order or take other appropriate action without rehearing or may schedule a further hearing.
(3) The filing of a motion for reconsideration or other post-decision relief shall not stay any order of the court unless, upon specific written request, the court has ordered such a stay.
(f) Motions to Recuse. All grounds for recusal that are known or should reasonably be known prior to trial or hearing shall be incorporated in a written motion for recusal and filed promptly with the court. Grounds for recusal that first become apparent at the time of or during the hearing shall be immediately brought to the attention of the court. Failure to raise a ground for recusal shall constitute a waiver as specified herein of the right to request recusal on such ground. If a record of the proceedings is not available, the court shall make a record of the request, the court's findings, and its order. The court's ruling on the motion shall issue promptly. If the motion is denied, the court's ruling shall be supported by findings of fact with respect to the allegations contained in the motion.
(g) Motions for Summary Judgment.
(1) Motion for Summary Judgment. Motions for summary judgment shall be filed, defended and disposed of in accordance with the provisions of RSA 491:8-a as amended. Such motions, objections thereto and supporting memoranda to such motions and objections shall provide specific page, paragraph, and line references to any pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, responses to requests for admission, affidavits, or other evidentiary documents filed with the court in support of or in opposition to the Motion for Summary Judgment. Only such materials as are essential and specifically cited and referenced in the motion, objection, and supporting memoranda shall be filed with the court. In addition, except by permission of the court received in advance, no motion and supporting memorandum if filed, together shall exceed 25 double-spaced pages and similarly no objection and supporting memorandum, if filed, together shall exceed 25 double-spaced pages. The purpose of this rule is to avoid unnecessary and duplicative filing of materials with the court. Excerpts of documents and discovery materials shall be used whenever possible.
(2) Moving Party's Statement of Material Facts.
(a) Content. Every motion for summary judgment or its supporting memorandum shall be accompanied by a separate statement of the material facts as to which the moving party contends there is no genuine issue to be tried, set forth in consecutively numbered paragraphs, with page, paragraph and line references to supporting pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, responses to requests for admission, affidavits, or other evidentiary documents. Failure to include the foregoing statement shall constitute grounds for denial of the motion.
(b) Additional Service of Electronic Form of Statement of Material Facts to other Parties. At the time the motion and separate statement of material undisputed facts are filed with the court, the statement of material facts shall also be contemporaneously sent in electronic form by email to all parties against whom summary judgment is sought to facilitate the requirements of the following paragraph. The statement of material facts in electronic form shall be sent as an attachment to an email and shall be in a Microsoft Word document (or a document convertible to Word) unless the parties agree to use another word processing format. The requirement to separately email the statement of material facts to the opposing party does not alter the date or method of service for filing motions, memoranda or statements of material undisputed facts with the court.
(3) The Nonmoving Party.
(a) Response to the Motion and the Statement of Material Facts. The nonmoving party shall have 30 days after the filing of the motion for summary judgment to object, unless another deadline is established by order of the court. An objection to a motion for summary judgment shall be accompanied by a response to the moving party's statement of material undisputed facts identifying which, if any, of the purported undisputed facts identified in the moving party's statement the nonmoving party contends are in dispute. The form of the nonmoving party's response shall be consistent with the requirements of Paragraph (g)(3)(b). For purposes of summary judgment, any fact set forth in the moving party's statement of material facts shall be deemed to have been admitted unless controverted as set forth in this paragraph.
(b) Filing a Consolidated Statement of Material Facts. To permit the court to have in hand a single document containing the parties' positions as to material facts in easily comprehensible form, the nonmoving party shall save the moving party's statement of material facts as a new document and shall set forth a response to each directly below the appropriate numbered paragraph, including, if the response relies on opposing evidence, page, paragraph and line references to supporting pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, responses to requests for admission, affidavits, or other evidentiary documents. Where the obligation to send the statement of material facts in electronic form has been excused, the response to the statement of material facts may be in a separate document.
(c) Statement of Additional Material Facts. Along with its response to the moving party's statement of facts, the nonmoving party may assert an additional statement of material facts with respect to the claims on which the moving party seeks summary judgment, each to be supported with page, paragraph and line references to supporting pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, responses to requests for admission, affidavits, or other evidentiary documents.
(d) The Moving Party's Reply to Additional Material Facts. The moving party shall reply to the nonmoving party's additional statement of material facts within 20 days of filing and in the manner required by Paragraph (g)(3). For purposes of summary judgment, any fact set forth in the nonmoving party's additional statement of material facts shall be deemed to have been admitted unless controverted as set forth in this paragraph.
(e) Filing a Consolidated Statement with Additional Material Facts. Such an additional statement and reply shall be a continuation of the nonmoving party's response described in Paragraph (g)(3)(a)-(b), with an appropriate heading, and shall not be a separate document. Where the nonmoving party includes such an additional statement in its response, the response, including the additional statement, also shall be sent in electronic form by email to the moving party, unless excused as provided in Paragraph (g)(4).
(4) Exemption for Submission of a Consolidated Statement of Material Facts. The requirement for transmission by email and filing of a consolidated statement of material facts shall automatically be excused if (i) the moving or any nonmoving party is self-represented, (ii) the moving or any nonmoving party is incarcerated, (iii) the attorney for any party certifies in an affidavit that he or she does not have access to email, or (iv) the attorney for the moving party certifies in an affidavit that an opposing party's attorney has no email address or has not disclosed his or her email address. In addition, prior to the obligation to electronically transmit and file a consolidated statement of material facts, any party may file a motion to excuse the obligation to submit a consolidated statement of facts setting forth any circumstances establishing good cause to relieve the parties' obligations to comply with Paragraph (g)(3)(b) and (e). Good cause to excuse the requirement for a consolidated statement includes, without limitation: ( 1) that the process outlined herein will be unworkable due to the involvement of multiple parties in the summary judgment process; (2) that the process outlined herein will be unnecessary or unduly burdensome, as certified by the parties; (3) that the issues to be determined on summary judgment are solely issues of law and not fact; or (4) that the costs of compliance with this rule do not warrant its enforcement, as certified by the parties.
(5) Page Limits. Neither the statement of material facts as to which there is no genuine issue to be tried nor the response thereto shall be subject to the 25-page limitation in Paragraph (g)(1) of this rule.
(6) Cross-Motions. Cross-motions for summary judgment and oppositions thereto shall comply with the requirements of this rule, with the result that there shall be a single consolidated document for both the original motion for summary judgment and the cross-motion containing the respective statements of material facts and responses thereto, unless excused as provided in Paragraph (g)(4).
(7) Partial Summary Judgment. Where a plaintiff successfully moves for summary judgment on the issue of liability or a defendant concedes liability and the case proceeds to trial by jury, the parties must provide the trial judge with a statement of agreed facts sufficient to explain the case to the jury and place it in a proper context so that the jurors might more readily understand what they will be hearing in the remaining portion of the trial. The court shall present the jury with the agreed statement of facts. Absent such an agreement on facts, the court shall provide such a statement.
(8) Sanctions for Noncompliance. The court need not consider any motion or opposition that fails to comply with the requirements of this rule and may deny or grant a motion for summary judgment based on the failure of the moving party or the nonmoving party to comply with this rule.
Adopted May 22, 2013, eff. October 1, 2013; amended April 4, 2014, eff. May 1, 2014; October 18, 2017, eff. January 1, 2018; July 13, 2018, eff. September 18, 2018; April 19, 2019, eff. July 1, 2019; October 29, 2021, eff. January 1, 2022.
2021: The 2021 amendment, effective January 1, 2022, rewrote (g).
2019: The 2019 amendment rewrote (g).
2018: The 2018 amendment added "or electronically delivered" in the first sentence of introductory text of (e).
2017: The 2017 amendment substituted "A party intending to file a motion for reconsideration or to request other post- decision relief shall do so within" for "A Motion for Reconsideration or other post-decision relief shall be filed within" at the beginning of (e).
2014: Subdivision (e): Added the third sentence and the Comment.
Rule 12 works alongside Rule 11’s general motion rules by spelling out the mechanics for the motions litigants file most often. Motions to amend a pleading follow different standards depending on whether the change is one of form, which is allowed as of course, or of substance, which is allowed on terms justice requires; a plaintiff generally cannot amend after a default until the defendant has had notice and a chance to be heard. Motions to consolidate let a party ask to combine related actions pending in different counties for trial. Motions to continue must be signed, must certify that the reasons for the delay were disclosed to and accepted by the other side, and generally cannot bump a case scheduled first because of a conflict with a later-scheduled matter, apart from a few listed exceptions.
Rule 12(d) governs the motion to dismiss — New Hampshire’s mechanism for asking the court to end a case, or a claim within it, before trial. Rather than restating every ground for dismissal, the rule addresses timing: upon a party’s request, hearings on motions to dismiss are to be scheduled as soon as practicable, and no later than 30 days before the trial date, unless the court orders otherwise. Rule 12(e) covers motions to reconsider — the vehicle for asking the court to revisit a decision it has already made. Such a motion must be filed within 10 days of the notice of the order or decision, must point with particular clarity to law or facts the court overlooked or misapprehended, cannot exceed 10 pages, and is decided without a hearing unless the court orders one; filing it does not automatically pause the order it challenges. Rule 12(f) covers motions to recuse a judge, which must be raised as soon as the grounds are known or reasonably should be known, or the right to seek recusal is waived.
Rule 12(g) is New Hampshire’s summary-judgment rule. A motion for summary judgment must be accompanied by a separate, numbered statement of the material facts the moving party contends are undisputed, with pinpoint page, paragraph, and line references to the record; the nonmoving party then has 30 days to object and must respond fact by fact, since any fact not controverted is deemed admitted. A motion and its supporting memorandum, combined, generally cannot exceed 25 pages, and the same limit applies to an objection and its memorandum. The rule builds in a structured exchange — a reply to any additional facts the nonmoving party asserts, consolidated statements so the court can see both sides’ positions in one document, and automatic exemptions from the electronic-filing requirements for self-represented or incarcerated parties — so the court can see exactly what is, and is not, contested before it rules.